WHY HE CAME
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Part 2: Light for a Darkened World
For He delivered us from the domain of darkness, and transferred us
to the kingdom of His beloved Son, in whom we have redemption, the
forgiveness of sins. Colossians 1:13-14
For complete resources, visit our Library at
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ASPECTS
a monthly devotional journal
by David S. Lampel
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Issue #109 December 1999
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WHY HE CAME
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Part 2: Light for a Darkened World
For He delivered us from the domain of darkness, and transferred us
to the kingdom of His beloved Son, in whom we have redemption, the
forgiveness of sins. Colossians 1:13-14
___________________
But your iniquities have separated you from your God;
your sins have hidden his face from you,
so that he will not hear.
For your hands are stained with blood,
your fingers with guilt.
Your lips have spoken lies,
and your tongue mutters wicked things.
No one calls for justice;
no one pleads his case with integrity.
They rely on empty arguments and speak lies;
they conceive trouble and give birth to evil.
The world had always had its prophets and seers. It had always had its
teachers and preachers, those who cared to instruct the ones who knew
less. It had long had its priests and holy men, those set apart as
knowing more of their gods than mere common man.
Since the time of Hammurabi of Babylon, the world had always had its
rules and regulations, its codes of civic behavior to keep its citizens
in line. There had always been policemen and soldiers, judges and
bailiffs to dole out punishments and rewards. Man had never lacked for
structure and laws, and reasons to behave.
Then the one God, Jahweh, sent down from heaven His own code of
behavior. So that man would always know His standard of righteousness,
God gave His law for them to learn, to carry around with them, to write
upon their hands and foreheads, and to seal within their hearts. And He
said, "When you sin against me--because you will--you are to come
before me with the shed blood of an innocent beast. Then I will
forgive, and turn away from your sin."
But it wasn't enough. None of it was enough.
Man still went astray, rejecting righteousness for corruption, choosing
mammon over God. Man played out his evil because it was easier: it was
his way, his bent; it came from within. Even those who tried--the ones
called 'righteous' by their neighbors--even they stumbled and tripped
on their way to goodness and salvation. They still fell short of a
standard set far above their heads.
And those who cared to, despaired.
So justice is far from us,
and righteousness does not reach us.
We look for light, but all is darkness;
for brightness, but we walk in deep shadows.
Like the blind we grope along the wall,
feeling our way like men without eyes.
At midday we stumble as if it were twilight;
among the strong, we are like the dead. Isaiah 59:2-4,9-10
The pure light walks the earth; the darkness, received into the
heart of Deity, is there swallowed up. Where, except in
uncreated light, can the darkness be drowned? C.S. Lewis
IN THE BEGINNING
And God said, "Let there be light."
Into the overwhelming darkness of a world gone mad, God sent His Light.
Into a world heavy with evil, political cruelty, and religious
oppression God sent the One who would become the brilliant path to
salvation, and righteousness.
Long, long before, nearer the beginning of all things, God had answered
a similar darkness with destruction. He had saved a tiny remnant, but
wiped out all the rest by His watery wrath. Now He would answer the vile
turns of man not with destruction, but with a new hope, a way out for
all who would believe.
The Light was expected. The scholars had studied the prophets, reading
about Messiah's power and majesty, but they had missed the part about
His being a "lamb led to slaughter." They had looked to the stars to
explain His delay, but they didn't imagine that a star would lead them
to a hovel in Bethlehem. They thought He might descend from heaven in a
cloud, landing with both feet on the necks of their oppressors. It
didn't occur to them that He would come by way of woman, and land in a
rude manger.
He is the image of the invisible God, the firstborn over all
creation. For by him all things were created: things in heaven and
on earth, visible and invisible, whether thrones or powers or rulers
or authorities; all things were created by him and for him.
Col. 1:15-16
That coarse and filthy feeding trough, mounded with the grass food for
livestock, cradled in earthly form the Creator of all things. As such,
it had been His nature to illumine the darkness with His light. When, in
the very beginning, the Godhead created light for the new universe, it
was His light that first pierced the dark void. When God called Moses to
the bush, He did it with the light of fire, and later, when God led the
people of Israel through the wilderness, He did so with a burning pillar
of light.
Later, much later, when Christ wanted the attention of Saul of Tarsus,
He got it by blinding the man with His own light. And when He came in
flesh, to be born of a woman in the dust and muck of the Bethlehem
village, His arrival was announced by a piercing light from the heavens,
so that all might know the way.
After Jesus was born in Bethlehem in Judea, during the time of King
Herod, Magi from the east came to Jerusalem and asked, "Where is the
one who has been born king of the Jews? We saw his star in the east
and have come to worship him." After they had heard the king, they
went on their way, and the star they had seen in the east went ahead
of them until it stopped over the place where the child was. When
they saw the star, they were overjoyed. Matthew 2:1-2,9-10
Break forth, O beauteous heav'nly light,
And usher in the morning;
Ye shepherds, shrink not with affright,
But hear the angel's warning.
This child now weak in infancy,
Our confidence and joy shall be.
The pow'r of Satan breaking,
Our peace eternal making.
He comes, a Child, from realms on high,
He comes the heav'ns adoring;
He comes to earth to live and die,
A broken race restoring.
Although the King of kings is He,
He comes in deep humility;
His people to deliver,
And reign in us forever.
Johann Rist/Joseph Barlowe
THE DIM BRILLIANCE OF OUR OWN ILLUMINATION
When a lazy housemaid was scolded for the untidiness of the
rooms, she exclaimed, "I'm sure the rooms would be clean enough
if it were not for the nasty sun which is always showing the
dirty corners." In the same way men revile the gospel because
it reveals their own sin. Thus all agitations for reforms in
church and state are opposed, and all manner of mischief
attributed to them as if they created the evils which they
bring to light. The lover of the right courts anything which
may manifest the wrong, but those who love evil never have a
good word for those disturbing beams of truth which show up the
filthy corners of their hearts and lives. C.H. Spurgeon.
Just as our eyesight will eventually adjust to the dark surroundings in
which we find ourselves, so man has gradually become accustomed to the
darkness in which he lives. Step from the brilliance of noonday sun into
a small darkened room, and the new enclosure seems utterly black. But
remain a few moments and, as the eyes adjust, the details of the room
emerge. Soon the black has been replaced by a dim light previously
unnoticed.
Step from the illuminated interior of a house into the exterior black of
night. At first glance there are few stars salting the night sky. But
remain a while, standing in the darkness while the eyes adjust to the
dim surroundings, and soon the archway overhead is populated by myriad
bright lights.
Man has lived so long in the tepid gloom of his habitation that he
imagines it to be normal. He imagines the dim, gray light to which he is
accustomed to be the pinnacle of brilliance, the best it can be. And so
he is satisfied. He is as satisfied as the complacent frog swimming in a
beaker of gradually warmed water, who doesn't notice when his bath
becomes sufficiently hot to cook, rather than cleanse, his flesh. He is
as satisfied as the blind fish swimming so deep that light does not
penetrate the gloom, so eyes are unnecessary. So man has become blinded
by his own mediocrity.
The god of this age has blinded the minds of unbelievers, so that
they cannot see the light of the gospel of the glory of Christ, who
is the image of God. 2 Cor. 4:4
Jesus came to replace the false brilliance of man's mediocrity with the
true brilliance of His saving light. He came to show the people of His
own creation that they needn't settle for the dim tawdriness of their
self-imposed destiny, but could, instead, rise into the light of His
salvation. He came to be a shining light to those trapped in darkness.
When Jesus spoke again to the people, he said, "I am the light of
the world. Whoever follows me will never walk in darkness, but will
have the light of life." John 8:12
The darkness of man's surroundings represents the full brilliance of his
own light. Traveling in Kenya years ago, Linda and I found ourselves
spending the night in a grass hut, in a camp along a river. In the
middle of the hut hung a single low-wattage bulb. For a few hours in the
evening that bulb dimly glowed by the faint energy of a small generator,
pulsating in rhythm with the unsteady up-and-down flow of its source's
output.
When the power was first turned on at nightfall, our response was, "Is
that all there is?" At first we strained to make out the interior of our
modest domicile. But in a short while our eyes grew accustomed to the
faint light, and we were able to comfortably move about the dwelling and
prepare for bed. In no time the light had become sufficient for our
needs. By the time the generator was shut down for the night, we were
reading by its dim product. And if someone had suddenly flipped on a
more typical level of room light, it would have been a painful
replacement for that to which we had become accustomed.
Jesus came as a blinding white light to a people more accustomed to the
dim glow of their own faint illumination. His arrival hurt their eyes.
And when man is suddenly confronted with painful brilliance, he covers
his eyes and turns away.
In him was life, and that life was the light of men. The light
shines in the darkness, but the darkness has not understood it.
John 1:4-5
LOVING DARKNESS
A typical young child would happily let his or her diet consist solely
of ice cream, peanut butter and jelly sandwiches, candy, cookies, and
the odd piece of cake or pie. This same child would also while away the
long hours of each day content with the entertainment of video games,
comic books, and garbage TV, soaking up the numbing, pedestrian
concoction until it leaked out the ears, spilling useless onto the
floor.
The typical parent of this typical child would meanwhile be set on
convincing the dull-witted offspring otherwise. They would place before
the child more substantial, more healthy sustenance, and would point out
the benefit of alternate sources of entertainment. The downcast child
(staring into a plate of vegetables) would be convinced that the parent
was only out to rob him or her of any joy in life, while the parent
would know that their purpose was entirely the opposite.
I will lead the blind by ways they have not known,
along unfamiliar paths I will guide them;
I will turn the darkness into light before them
and make the rough places smooth.
These are the things I will do;
I will not forsake them. Isaiah 42:16
The songs of the Christmas season speak glowingly of God sending His
"love" in the person of the baby Jesus. But just what does that mean?
What sort of love was this, sent down by the Father?
It was the love of a concerned parent whose children were wasting their
time in unhealthy pursuits. It was the love of a parent whose children
were on the path to ruin, consuming lies of their own invention.
The children claimed to be looking for the truth, claimed to be eagerly
awaiting the one who would bring with Him their salvation. But really
they were perfectly content to wallow in their own constructions of
truth, to remain happily ignorant of anything higher than themselves.
God the Father loved them enough to send the truth in the person of His
Son. He knew that His children would grumble and complain, that they
would even violently reject the truth He sent--but God sent it anyway.
He said, "You may turn away from My Son. You may reject My salvation.
But I'm sending Him anyway, for those who will see who He is."
Jesus explained it this way to Nicodemus:
"God so loved the world that he gave his one and only Son, that
whoever believes in him shall not perish but have eternal life. For
God did not send his Son into the world to condemn the world, but to
save the world through him. Whoever believes in him is not
condemned, but whoever does not believe stands condemned already
because he has not believed in the name of God's one and only Son.
This is the verdict: Light has come into the world, but men loved
darkness instead of light because their deeds were evil."
John 3:16-19
Man has always loved darkness more than the light. God knew this well;
He prefaced the incarnation of His redemptive love by sending first His
commandments and laws to show man the inadequacies of obedience outside
of grace. He let man stew in his own efforts until the precise
moment--when everything was in place.
Even so we, when we were children, were in bondage under the
elements of the world. But when the fullness of the time had come,
God sent forth His Son, born of a woman, born under the law, to
redeem those who were under the law, that we might receive the
adoption as sons. Galatians 4:3-5 nkjv
The one use of the Bible is to make us look at Jesus, that
through Him we might know His Father and our Father, His God
and our God. Till we thus know Him, let us hold the Bible dear
as the moon of our darkness, by which we travel toward the
east; not dear as the sun whence her light cometh, and towards
which we haste, that, walking in the sun himself, we may no
more need the mirror that reflected his absent brightness.
George Macdonald
Light of the world, we hail Thee, flushing the eastern skies;
Never shall darkness veil Thee again from human eyes;
Too long, alas, with-holden, now spread from shore to shore;
Thy light, so glad and golden, shall set on earth no more.
Light of the world, Thy beauty steals into every heart,
And glorifies with duty life's poorest, humblest part;
Thou robest in Thy splendor the simple ways of men,
And helpest them to render light back to Thee again.
Light of the world, illume this darkened earth of Thine,
Till everything that's human be filled with what's divine;
Till every tongue and nation, from sin's dominion free,
Rise in the new creation which springs from love for Thee.
John S.B. Monsell
THE SIMPLICITY OF HIS COMING
So there He was. A baby. Perhaps the simplicity of His coming was meant
to point us toward the simplicity of His proffered salvation. There were
no grand processions, no queues of dignitaries waiting to pay homage.
There were no brass bands and long-winded speeches proclaiming the
importance of the moment. There were no ranks of soldiers arrayed
outside, standing guard over this most valuable personage.
There was only a newborn child, suckling from His mother's breast.
And there were in the same country shepherds abiding in the field,
keeping watch over their flock by night. And, lo, the angel of the
Lord came upon them, and the glory of the Lord shone round about
them: and they were sore afraid. And the angel said unto them, Fear
not: for, behold, I bring you good tidings of great joy, which shall
be to all people. For unto you is born this day in the city of David
a Saviour, which is Christ the Lord. Luke 2:8-11 kjv
Born... Saviour... Christ... Lord...
What an odd combination of words. Saviors are to come riding in on a
white stallion, or come crashing through the ranks brandishing blazing
lightning bolts. Everyone thought that the Christ--the Messiah--was to
arrive with sword flashing, demanding obeisance.
I will proclaim the decree of the LORD:
He said to me, "You are my Son;
today I have become your Father.
Ask of me,
and I will make the nations your inheritance,
the ends of the earth your possession.
You will rule them with an iron scepter;
you will dash them to pieces like pottery."
Therefore, you kings, be wise;
be warned, you rulers of the earth.
Serve the LORD with fear
and rejoice with trembling.
Kiss the Son, lest he be angry
and you be destroyed in your way,
for his wrath can flare up in a moment.
Blessed are all who take refuge in him.
Psalm 2:7-12
The shepherds may rightly have asked, "Will we find Him in the best
house, draped in robes of royal purple? Will we locate His dwelling by
the brilliance of His holy fire?"
And this shall be a sign unto you; Ye shall find the babe wrapped in
swaddling clothes, lying in a manger. Luke 2:12 kjv
How utterly odd to a people blinded by their ideas of what a Savior
would be. For centuries man had struggled in vain to supply his own mean
salvation, and if, he thought, there was to be something or someone
external supplying it instead, then surely it would be an event or a
person on the grandest scale. But, as it turned out, the Light was
carried into a darkened, lost world in the flesh of a small baby, born
into humble means, to, of all things, a virgin.
THE SOURCE
"For even the Son of Man did not come to be served, but to serve,
and to give his life as a ransom for many." Mark 10:45
As the golden dawn gently enters the gray, fading night of a new day, so
Jesus gently entered the dark, fading glories of the world. He came
without a shout, without force, and without the trappings of deity. He
came as the least among them, a small child, born of a woman, to move
without fanfare into the world of His creation.
Jesus came not as a tyrant, but as an opportunity; He came not to
dictate a new way, but to offer it with loving, outstretched hand.
Jesus didn't come to change everything. He didn't come so that His light
would remove all the world's darkness. The world and its people would,
for the most part, remain swimming in its emptiness and dark futility.
Many would refuse His truth, favoring a truth of their own; many would
refuse His healing light, holding fast to their more familiar darkness.
Come, Thou my Light, that I may see
Thy truth divine, Thy love so free.
Dispel the clouds of doubt and sin,
And let the face of God shine in.
Light is both a presence and a guide; it is both an illuminated goal,
and a help lighting the path. Jesus stands as a strong, piercing beacon
on a hill, offering Himself as the ultimate destination for a world gone
mad. "Come unto Me," He cries, standing there in all His terrible
holiness.
One day Jesus invited John--with his brother, James, and Peter--to
accompany Him on a trek up the steeps of Mount Hermon. He offered no
explanation for the journey, but, of course, they followed.
Suddenly, the three men were bathed in a blinding, crystalline wash of
light. They instinctively shielded their eyes, expecting the moment to
pass, thinking it to be a flash of lightning atop the often-stormy
summit. But the white light persisted. As their eyes slowly grew
accustomed to it, the disciples peered through the light toward the spot
where they had last seen Jesus.
He stood before them, the source of the light. John had never seen
anything like it before. He sought to explain the phenomenon, but
failed. There was no light near Jesus; it was not a reflected light from
another source--Jesus' face was the light. And His clothing was as white
as the light that emanated from his face.
John was struck dumb--as were his companions, Peter and James. They
looked at each other, as if to confirm that they weren't asleep and all
sharing the same dream.
And, somehow, John knew that before them stood Jesus as He truly was:
the very Son of God, in all His heavenly splendor. Jesus was giving them
the privilege of seeing what others would have to believe on faith
alone.
A brilliant cloud enveloped them and out of the cloud a voice commanded:
"This is My beloved Son, with whom I am well-pleased; listen to Him!"
At this, the three disciples fell prostrate, shaking with fear, knowing
that no one could be this close to God and live. John lost all track of
time. He had no idea how long they remained with their faces to the
ground, but the next thing he knew, Jesus was touching him and the
others, kindly telling them to shed their fear and get up.
Come, Thou my Guide, that I may know
The way my seeking soul should go;
And never from Thee let me stray,
Thyself the Life, the Truth, the Way.
Hugh T. Kerr
Jesus also came to illuminate the way. He not only is our best
objective, but our helpmeet along the way. It is His life we follow, His
example we use as our template for living. It is His life that brightens
our path, giving us encouragement and hope. His salvation is not just an
ultimate destination, but a daily reality. It is the light of His
salvation that daily brightens our way, giving the sure and constant
hope that we need no longer dwell in this earth's darkness.
WALKING IN HIS LIGHT
an afterword
There is a moment, quiet, utterly ordinary. I walk down the gravel
driveway on my way to empty the mailbox of the day's delivery. I may
have just left a depressing news report, or images of the day's most
recent tragedy. I may have been wallowing in anger or self pity, or have
just slammed down the phone on an obnoxious salesman. I may have stepped
away from my desk fit to put my fist through the nearest solid object.
But as I walk outside the fresh air stings my face; I look up into a
blue sky puffed here and there by white clouds. A slight breeze carries
to my senses the aromas of the season--either the fresh life of spring
or summer, the musky dryness of autumn, or the crisp cold bite of
winter.
In that moment my heart fills to overflowing with the love and grace of
God. My chest grows tight, bursting with adoration for my Lord. My mind
is suddenly emptied of malice and dark thought, replaced by an
overwhelming lightness of being.
You may ask what it means to walk in the light of Christ. It is that
moment just described. You may ask how the light of an invisible Savior
could possibly make any change in the ordinary life of an earth-bound
human being. How? By lifting all of one's senses beyond the ordinary;
His light lifts our feet up away from the leaden gravity of earth, onto
a plane of hope, of glorious anticipation and praise.
The light of Jesus Christ does not remove all the cares and trials that
come from living upon this earth, but they are cast into insignificance.
They no longer hold sway over us; they no longer have dominion. Instead,
we enjoy the safety and peace of His dominion.
Do you know that peace? Do you walk in the Light?
I couldn't see the sunshine through the shadows;
I couldn't seem to find a soul to care;
Then in my darkest hour, You touched me with Your pow'r,
And when I looked Your light was everywhere.
The light of a million mornings filled my heart;
The sound of a million angels sang my song.
The warmth of a love so tender,
Touched my life and suddenly,
The light of a million mornings dawned in me.
I've never tried to understand a sunrise,
I only know it takes away the dawn;
I can't explain Your healing, or all the joy I'm feeling;
I only know You've come into my heart.
Claire Cloninger
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